Tallo stepped into the circle with a spring in his stride, boots ringing against the tal floor like punctuation marks in a song only he could hear. The chs lood around them, hulking shadows cast by the glow of the ergency lights. He turned a full circle, head tilting this way and that, grinning like a man greeting an audience that had finally arrived to see his show. Then he rolled his neck until it cracked, humming softly as though tuning himself.
“What is your na?” Tallo asked, his tone bright and sing-song, almost cheerful. “It’s only right that I know the man’s na I will take.” He twirled the dagger between his fingers and pointed it toward Vaeliyan like an actor gesturing to his cue. The words weren’t mockery. They were ceremony, and Tallo adored ceremony.
Vaeliyan tilted his head, voice cold through the modulator. “You can call the Siren’s Song,” he said evenly. “For that is what I’ll sing to you.”
Tallo clapped his hands once, laughing. “Oh, delightful! A singer! Well then, Siren, I applaud you already.” He swept into a half-bow, blade resting on his shoulder. “You’ll get to see at my most human.” He straightened, his grin sharp enough to cut glass. “It’s been far too long since I’ve fed my appetite. You’ll do nicely. High Imperators always do. You’re one of them, aren’t you? One of the new ones?”
Vaeliyan gave a single nod, silent but unmistakable.
“Oh, good,” Tallo said with delight, twirling his dagger and grinning wider. “Well, please, don’t let the performance go unfinished. I hate to let an audience go wanting.”
Vaeliyan’s stance shifted just slightly. “You’re exactly what I was hoping for,” he said, his voice calm but edged.
Tallo stilled, his grin twitching wider. “What do you an by that?” he asked, head cocked, tone all curiosity and mischief. “You don’t seem worried. How… intriguing.”
“Brother,” Vaeliyan said softly, voice like a low hum in the static air, “you have no idea how excited I am. There’s a kinship between you and I, and you’re about to feel it.”
“A lot of bravado,” Tallo said as he jabbed his dagger toward Vaeliyan, smiling like a stage villain caught mid-soliloquy, “for one who hides his face.”
“Oh,” Vaeliyan replied, dry and steady, “I don’t hide my face. I’m just not stupid enough to take off my armor.”
“Good man!” Tallo barked, snapping his fingers with delight. He bounced on his heels, energy vibrating through him. “At least you’re not boring. Gods, I was starting to think all of you High Imperators ca out of the mold polished and joyless.” His laughter rippled through the room, warm, sharp, and terrifyingly alive. “Maybe you’ll even make bleed!”
The seventeen chs surrounding the circle shifted slightly, their movents synchronizing with the rhythm of Tallo’s voice. The glow from their cores washed over the pilots inside, soldiers flanked by clusters of researchers and technicians, watching from behind sealed hatches. They weren’t there to fight; they were there to protect. Their orders were clear: guard the minds Tallo ant to save, and if this all went to hell, get them out.
Vaeliyan didn’t need to read their faces to know the truth. Fear carried through the air like a pulse. They weren’t loyal to Tallo’s cause, they were loyal to the conviction in his voice, the madness that made them believe they’d matter to history if they followed him.
It all clicked then. The chs weren’t an army. They were lifeboats. The circle wasn’t a battlefield. It was a curtain call for a dying act, and the audience was trying to flee before the fire reached their seats.
“Tallo,” Vaeliyan said, voice steady but heavy, “is that what I should call you?”
Tallo leaned forward with a wink. “You can call the Joker,” he said, voice bubbling with mirth. “If I’m to call you the Siren.”
“Very well.” Vaeliyan’s tone dropped, calm and certain. “Joker, do you wish for death?”
Tallo threw his head back and laughed, a wild, theatrical sound that echoed through the tal chamber. “No, Siren!” he shouted, drawing his blade and spinning it once before leveling it toward Vaeliyan. “I wish for a challenge!”
The first clash was only a test, a polite introduction dressed in violence. Tallo produced what appeared to be a second black knife with a flourish, its surface swallowing the glow of the overhead lights. It was the twin of the first, guardless and eager. He spun both blades once, crossing them in front of him as if announcing the start of a performance, then t The Siren’s club in a cross strike. The impact was sharp, tal kissing tal, both of them feeling out the other’s rhythm and weight.
Tallo observed the eting of strength and pressure the way a perforr reads his audience. His instincts told him he should have had the upper hand. He was leaner, faster, unburdened by Legion armor. He had trained in art, not brutality, in the sweep of balance and rhythm, the conversation of motion. He told himself that the raw force of soldiers and their machines had nothing on grace, on control, on the beauty of edge and angle. He believed that until the clash told him otherwise.
When the weapons locked, the truth arrived with the blunt finality of iron. Tallo was not the stronger of the two. The man before him, that blunt instrunt wrapped in Legion plating, moved with a grounded weight that was simply greater. The Siren fought like soone who had been engineered to endure, his club little more than an extension of inevitability. It wasn’t elegant, and it wasn’t ant to be. His attacks were direct, confident, born of certainty rather than style. Each strike said: I am here to end this.
And that armor… that damned armor. It wasn’t a suit. It wasn’t a man. It was a creature. Insectoid. Alien. A giant, gold and black, wasp-like shell with plates that caught the light like chitin. The eyes, if they could be called that, were a cluster of mirrored lenses, not reflective enough to show Tallo his own face, only cold light and motion. Antennae twitched faintly from the helm’s crown, reacting to the air, the vibration of sound. It unsettled him in a way few things did. He was like fighting a monster, not a man.
There was no expression to read, no sign of life beyond the precision of movent. Every strike from The Siren ca as if he’d already seen the mont before it happened. Every counter was minimal, unfeeling, perfect.
Tallo’s eyes flicked toward the weapon in disgusted fascination. The clubs were forged of black steel, he could tell by the way they caught the light, by the sound they made on impact. The sa indestructible material as his own blade. And this brute had shaped it into a club, a stick with a nail. Who would waste such a perfect material on sothing so crude? he thought. Such steel deserved to dance, to sing, to be art, not bludgeon.
He shifted his stance with a sigh, almost disappointed in the display. “What a waste,” he murmured to himself, too low for The Siren to hear. “A beautiful material turned into a stick.”
He smiled again, sharper this ti. His blade was his art, his law, his life. It was the only one of its kind, and by decree of his adopted father, the late prince, no one else was permitted to wield it. Too dangerous, too temperantal, too alive in the wrong hands. It was not a legacy. It was Tallo’s alone, and it always would be.
There were rumors, of course, that he carried two. That he fought with paired blades, each one moving like a fragnt of his will. That was the trick. The lie. He had only one. He could make it seem like more, could shape its presence as easily as he breathed, but there was only ever one. Because the blade itself was him. Not an extension. Not a tool. The blade was Tallo.
He was not a soldier; he was an artist in motion, painting arcs of death with every step. Every line of his body, every cut, was an act of creation.
The Siren, however, did not share that artistry. His movents carried no aesthetic, no flourish, only brutal necessity. He drove forward, heavy-footed but assured, his club swinging with cruel precision. When they clashed again, sparks burst and fell like scattered applause. Tallo twisted, pivoted, and slashed in a motion so fluid it could have been choreography. The Siren still countered it, still unshaken, that faceless, chitinous helm tilting just slightly as if watching a performance he’d already seen before.
Tallo stepped back, breathing faster now. “There hasn’t been a single strike you weren’t ready for,” he said softly, half to himself, half to the thing standing before him. “How boring you must be beneath that shell.”
He circled, footfalls echoing against the tal floor. Then, smiling wide, he surged forward. “Let’s make this interesting.”
He moved faster, his blade blurred, its presence multiplying in the air, twin streaks of black cutting in escalating tempo. It was not fighting; it was dance, and his weapon sang to the rhythm of his heart. But The Siren kept pace. He did not match Tallo’s grace, but t it, every motion intercepted, every attempt deflected with surgical indifference. The sound of tal striking tal filled the room in relentless, asured rhythm.
Tallo’s grin wavered, then grew again. “You don’t play,” he said, ducking under a swing, “but you listen. I’ll give you that.”
Still, The Siren gave nothing back. The insect-faced helm showed no expression, only the faint shimr of its mirrored lenses catching motion. It was like sparring against an idea of inevitability.
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Tallo laughed. “Isn’t this a little slow for you?” he called out, his voice bright with mockery. He jabbed his blade toward The Siren’s chest, withdrawing it just before impact with a teasing flick.
The Siren tilted his head slightly, voice low, even, and calm. “I thought we were just warming up,” he said. “Would you like to try?”
The sound of his voice sent a thrill down Tallo’s spine, asured, detached, and perfectly sincere. He barked a laugh, loud enough to echo off the tal walls. “Boy,” he said, eyes glinting, “if you do not try, you will die worthlessly. Even if you do, you will still die. But maybe, maybe you will give a small sense of joy. That, I think, is sothing worth being proud of.”
The Siren shifted again, stance altering by barely an inch. The air around him changed, sothing subtle, a pressure Tallo couldn’t na. And when they clashed again, the rhythm broke. The Siren was faster now, deliberate yet overwhelming. Each strike ca without warning yet landed exactly where it should. His counters were no longer reaction; they were prediction.
It was the kind of fight that stripped away everything unnecessary. The noise faded. The world narrowed. Tallo’s blade began to sing, spinning arcs of black that drew patterns through the air. The club t it every ti, perfect, unfeeling, inescapable.
Tallo’s laughter grew quieter, turning thoughtful, almost reverent. “Oh,” he breathed, stepping closer, “so you can dance.”
The Siren didn’t answer.
Tallo smiled again, blood singing, eyes bright with appetite.
Tallo decided to spice things up a little. The opening act had been dull, painfully so, and he needed so color in his life before the thrill vanished entirely. The Siren had shown promise, though. That crushing wave he’d unleashed earlier, the one that turned the lesser soldiers into pulp and bone dust, had been magnificent, art in its own brutal way. Tallo had cut through it, carving his own path through the maelstrom, but he had still felt it. That power had pressed against him, a presence heavy enough to bend the air. It could have killed gods. It could have ended his father if it had been here. For a heartbeat, Tallo had almost believed it might take him too. Almost. But Tallo was a blade, and blades could not be held, not truly; the mont you tried, you were already bleeding.
He exhaled through a grin and raised his hand. The black steel rippled, splitting, fanning outward like fingers opening to catch the light. One beca two, then five, each shaped perfectly, elegantly, a mirrored reflection of his control. In his other hand, the sa steel bent and flowed, extending into a longer, thinner edge, a duelist’s weapon, graceful and deadly. The five blades spread behind him like wings. He fell into a perfect stance, knees light, shoulders square, head tilted with an almost mocking poise. His balance was absolute, his intent clear: the stage was his again.
“Let’s try this again,” he said with a perforr’s smile, every syllable dripping theatrical ease. “How do you feel about a dance?”
The air tightened as the blades launched forward. Five streaks of darkness flew, slicing through the glow of the ergency lights, their movents perfectly in sync with Tallo’s pulse. He dashed behind them, moving like a conductor chasing his own orchestra, each step silent, asured, full of rhythm and grace. His thoughts ca quick and sharp: watch the openings, lead him in, control the pace, take the applause.
But The Siren did not play along. He didn’t need grandeur or ceremony. The twin black clubs in his hands, barely the length of a man’s forearm, shifted once, no flourish, no buildup, just a simple flick of motion. The sound that followed cracked like thunder. The air buckled from the force. Every one of Tallo’s blades was thrown off course midflight, spinning out of formation before dissolving into nothing.
The Siren remained unmoved in the haze, the strange insectoid armor rigid and alien, its surface dull, chitinous, absorbing light rather than reflecting it. Multi-lensed eyes caught faint glimrs of motion, not of expression, and the faint twitch of antennae gave him a kind of eerie patience, an inhuman stillness that made Tallo’s skin crawl.
Tallo froze midstep. The realization clawed at him. Those clubs weren’t weapons worthy of such defiance. They were short, plain, with spikes that never seed to matter, as if The Siren carried them out of habit rather than purpose. He’s not even using the spikes, Tallo thought, incredulous. He’s just hitting things. It was so insultingly simple, yet the strength behind each motion carried weight, efficiency, inevitability. One flick had countered five attacks at once. The physics of it defied him.
He forced his smile back, lips curling with artificial calm. “Interesting,” he murmured, his tone sowhere between admiration and insult. His eyes narrowed behind the smirk. “Very interesting.”
The Siren didn’t so much as twitch. The posture, upright, deliberate, heavy with silent disinterest, was infuriating. Tallo felt the urge to throw another attack just to see if he could draw so kind of emotion, but the creature in front of him seed to bleed exasperation without moving at all. Every inch of that monstrous armor seed to say: You’re boring .
Then The Siren spoke, and the voice inside that gold-black carapace didn’t match the image. “Dude,” it said, casual, almost lazy. “You’re kinda la with all this testing bullshit. I thought we were gonna fight, not try to tickle each other to death.”
The words landed with the weight of indifference. It was so human it almost broke the mont, so blunt it shattered the performance Tallo had built. He stared, torn between outrage and amusent. For all his precision, all his flair, this man, this bug, had reduced his art to sothing stupid. To sothing small.
The silence that followed stretched, charged, absurd. The hum of the ergency lights filled the background, low and endless. Tallo rolled his shoulders, the sound of steel whispering faintly as his blade flexed. His expression softened, beca more dangerous, almost serene. The grin that returned wasn’t theatrical now, it was personal.
“Oh, so that’s how it’s going to be,” he said lightly. “No art. No beauty. Just you and your little sticks against .” His eyes brightened, the thrill returning. “Fine. Let’s make so noise, then.”
He moved again, faster this ti, vanishing into motion. His single blade beca many once more, shadows upon shadows, while The Siren stood firm, watching, waiting, both clubs raised but relaxed, as though holding back the end of the world in each hand.
Vaeliyan could feel it now. The tension in the air had shifted, charged with sothing heavier, sharper. He had taunted the Joker, this Tallo, long enough to draw out sothing real. This wasn’t the shallow, ornantal performance the man had tried to orchestrate, all sweeping gestures and practiced rhythm ant to turn combat into theater. Tallo had mistaken him for an audience, for a participant in his show. But Vaeliyan was never the subject. He was the artist. Always had been. Every battle he fought was a canvas painted in motion and blood, and anyone who tried to choreograph him didn’t understand what it ant to face him.
Beneath the mask, he smiled. Not a cruel smile, not quite, just the kind of smile that cos when the hunt finally starts to an sothing. Tallo had a chip. It wasn’t just so special weapon or a trick technique. It was a Soul Skill. Vaeliyan had been watching closely, and what was happening before his eyes confird everything. This wasn’t re talent. It was resonance. A connection to sothing deeper. The kind of thing that only ca from a chip bound to flesh and soul.
He wanted it. Needed it. That fragnt didn’t belong in Tallo’s hands; it had never belonged there. It was wasted on a killer who didn’t see the predator in front of his own eyes. Once Tallo was dead, Vaeliyan would take it for himself. He would cut through his neck, open the flesh around the chip, and pry out the fragnt lodged inside. He could already imagine the sound it would make. The thought alone quickened his pulse. The fragnt would be his, and with it, the skill. The weapon that had always eluded him would finally be his.
The blade in Tallo’s hand dissolved into nothing, vanishing like smoke in wind. For a mont, the man stood empty-handed, smiling like a magician preparing the final act. Then, all around him, above him, a halo of blades shimred into being, dozens of them, forming an orbit of glinting death. One blade drifted downward into his palm, turning slowly as if awaiting a cue, while the others began to rotate faster, faster, until the air itself seed to vibrate from the hum of motion. Then, as though following an invisible rhythm, the halo expanded. Every blade elongated, black edges sharpening as they caught the light, until even the air looked carved. Tallo launched them in a perfect storm, a thousand-point waltz of precision and murder.
Vaeliyan watched it unfold, calm in the chaos. He could almost admire it. The way the blades moved in harmony, the elegance in each rotation, it was artistry in its own way. But artistry didn’t win wars. Artistry didn’t kill gods. He knew because he’d tried. So instead, he grinned beneath the mask. Tallo had no idea how he’d lost the last exchange, how all five of his strikes had been undone by one simple swing. He couldn’t. Because the truth wasn’t strength, or speed, or even luck. It was ti. Broken, fractured ti. Vaeliyan had bent it just enough to tilt the world’s rhythm into his favor. He’d shifted the angle of his strike, and t five blades with one. To the naked eye, it had looked like raw mastery. But to Vaeliyan, it was precision made possible by control over the smallest fragnt of eternity.
He could feel Tallo’s frustration spilling through every move. It radiated from the man like heat. Tallo’s skill was undeniable, he was one of the few who could make elegance feel dangerous, but genius carried its own flaw. The more refined a fighter beca, the more predictable they were. Perfection always fell into rhythm. And rhythm could be broken.
The easiest way to ruin soone like Tallo wasn’t brute force or superior speed. It was insult. You turned their art against them. You made them believe their beauty ant nothing, that their performance wasn’t worth watching. You stripped the aning from their movent until the grace beca emptiness. That’s when they fell apart. That’s when their precision beca panic.
So Vaeliyan gave him nothing. No flourish. No beauty. No elegance. Just crude, brutal swings, short, efficient, barbaric. Truncheons colliding with blades. Hamrs of black tal eting perfect arcs of artistry. Every hit landed like punctuation, ugly but absolute. He could see it in Tallo’s body language, the tightening shoulders, the flicker of irritation behind the eyes. Every clash mocked him. Every parried blade said, your art is worthless here.
Still, part of Vaeliyan understood him. Under different stars, they could have been allies. They could have shared drinks after breaking the world together, laughed over their scars, exchanged technique and philosophy, compared their hungers. Tallo had his art, and Vaeliyan had his hunger, but at their core, they were both searching for the sa thing: transcendence. Perfection through struggle. The line between mastery and madness. But tonight was not for friendship. Tonight was for survival. And the hunger in Vaeliyan’s chest, that deep, vibrating need that sang through his veins, was not screaming for death. It was purring, alive, patient. For once, it wasn’t about killing. It was about the anticipation of sothing truly worth fighting.
He hadn’t revealed it yet, not once during the fight. Every motion, every swing, every feigned misstep had been bait. He’d been waiting for this exact mont, the mont when Tallo’s pretense fell away and the real dance began. Because for all his arrogance and his theatrics, Tallo’s movents had rhythm. And Vaeliyan, the Siren Song, lived for rhythm. Theirs wasn’t a duel anymore; it was a song. One built on tempo, violence, and intent.
The stage was set, the world holding its breath. The Siren Song’s fingers tightened around his truncheons. Across from him, Tallo spread his hands, the halo of black blades spinning faster and faster until they blurred into a ring of shadow. Their eyes t, predator to predator, artist to artist, each recognizing sothing dangerously familiar in the other.
Finally, Vaeliyan exhaled, voice low inside his helt. “Now,” he whispered to no one in particular, “let’s make this beautiful.”
The stage was set for a dance worth rembering.
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